vendredi 23 décembre 2011

http://www.ufal.info/lettres/ufal_flash-143.htm#titre-2

La supercherie de la dette en une pagenew_window-2011-12-23-15-00.gif

par l'UFAL Union des FAmilles laïques http://www.ufal.org

Quelques repères historiques

À partir du milieu des années 60, le taux de profit diminue pour atteindre un minimum au début des années 80. La réaction des possédants est radicale et brutale, c’est le tournant néolibéral dont les deux principaux promoteurs politiques sont Ronald Reagan et Margaret Thatcher. Commence alors un vaste programme mondial, dans lequel la France s’engouffre, de déréglementations, de privatisations, de régression de la protection sociale. Le chômage est maintenu volontairement élevé et les inégalités se creusent avec une précarité croissante. La part des revenus du travail dans la richesse produite chute d’environ 10 points de PIB en 25 ans dans la plupart des pays industrialisés. Le taux de profit se redresse et la financiarisation de l’économie devient incontrôlable.

Deux dates clés sont à connaître concernant la Banque de France. En 1973, une loi est votée pour obliger l’État à emprunter sur le marché obligataire moyennant des taux d’intérêt : « Le Trésor public ne peut être présentateur de ses propres effets à l’escompte de la Banque de France ». En 1993 une nouvelle loi décide l’indépendance politique de la Banque de France : « Il est interdit à la Banque de France d’autoriser des découverts ou d’accorder tout autre type de crédit au Trésor public ou à tout autre organisme ou entreprise public. L’acquisition directe par la Banque de France de titres de leur dette est également interdite ».

Autre date clé, c’est la suspension de la convertibilité du dollar en or en 1971 par Richard Nixon, supprimant ainsi toute possibilité d’étalonner les monnaies.

Un emballement dogmatique qui mène à une crise prévisible

Les nouvelles bases ainsi posées pour continuer à augmenter le profit tiré d’un système productiviste entraînent mécaniquement un recours des particuliers à l’endettement pour compenser la dégradation de la condition salariale, plus ou moins selon que le niveau de protection sociale et les mécanismes de redistribution sont développés.

En parallèle, la part de l’économie réelle ne cesse de diminuer dans la finance mondialisée, toutes les activités humaines deviennent prétextes à marchandisation et spéculation, et les États se privent d’une partie des recettes qui leur permettent d’assurer leurs missions d’intérêt général.

Les « bulles » gonflent et éclatent les unes après les autres, les dettes sont transformées en produits financiers qui s’échangent et se vendent sans aucune retenue ni limite et viennent ainsi gangrener l’économie réelle.

Comme tout système instable finit inéluctablement par atteindre un point de rupture, ce qui devait arriver arriva, avec l’enchaînement que nous connaissons : crise des subprimes au EUA en 2007, faillite de la banque Lehman Brothers en 2008 avec réactions en chaîne dans le secteur bancaire, transformation des dettes privées en dettes d’État pour éviter l’implosion du système financier, et aujourd’hui, imposition de la rigueur (augmentation des impôts, baisse de la protection sociale, baisse de la dépense publique en proportion de la richesse produite, donc réduction des services publics, etc.) qui aura le même effet qu’une saignée pour guérir un anémié.

Tout a donc été fait pour préserver un système financier qui marche sur la tête et sauvegarder les intérêts d’une oligarchie pourtant responsable du désastre actuel. Pour y parvenir, il s’agit maintenant de faire payer aux peuples les errements de leurs dirigeants. C’est donc une double peine qui est appliquée au plus grand nombre : les désastres socio-économiques du néolibéralisme, et maintenant la facture d’une tentative désespérée de son sauvetage. Mais c’est aussi un recul de la démocratie et une dépolitisation poussée à l’extrême (la « règle d’or » en sera le point d’orgue), alors que la crise représentait une opportunité de construire une nouvelle économie qui réponde aux besoins en garantissant le progrès social et la sauvegarde de notre planète.Ils ont choisi la crise, à nous de refuser de payer et de construire un autre monde, sans eux.

vendredi 16 décembre 2011

Du haut de la sapinette

Une photo qui contribue à montrer que la forêt domine le paysage en Périgord vert. Le mitage est invisible.

IMG_4017-2011-12-16-13-24.JPG

mardi 6 décembre 2011

2011 - The Stockholm Memorandum

http://dotearth.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/05/18/in-earth-v-humanity-nobelists-issue-verdict/

Below you can read the verdict that emerged today at the Third Nobel Laureate Symposium on Global Sustainability. I agree with many conclusions and recommendations but disagree with others. I’m on deadline on unrelated work so you have to start the process of moving from manifestos to concrete steps on the ground that could smooth the human journey in this century. Here’s the Stockholm Memorandum:

PastedGraphic-2011-12-6-08-41.jpgThe Stockholm Memorandum
Tipping the Scales towards Sustainability



I. Mind-shift for a Great Transformation
The Earth system is complex. There are many aspects that we do not yet understand. However, we are the first generation with the insight of the new global risks facing humanity. We face the evidence that our progress as the dominant species has come at a very high price.
Unsustainable patterns of production, consumption, and population growth are challenging the resilience of the planet to support human activity. At the same time, inequalities between and within societies remain high, leaving behind billions with unmet basic human needs and disproportionate vulnerability to global environmental change.
This situation concerns us deeply. As members of the Symposium we call upon all leaders of the 21st century to exercise a collective responsibility of planetary stewardship. This means laying the foundation for a sustainable and equitable global civilization in which the entire Earth community is secure and prosperous.
Science makes clear that we are transgressing planetary boundaries that have kept civilization safe for the past 10,000 years. Evidence is growing that human pressures are starting to overwhelm the Earth’s buffering capacity.
Humans are now the most significant driver of global change, propelling the planet into a new geological epoch, the Anthropocene. We can no longer exclude the possibility that our collective actions will trigger tipping points, risking abrupt and irreversible consequences for human communities and ecological systems.
We cannot continue on our current path. The time for procrastination is over. We cannot afford the luxury of denial. We must respond rationally, equipped with scientific evidence.
Our predicament can only be redressed by reconnecting human development and global sustainability, moving away from the false dichotomy that places them in opposition.
In an interconnected and constrained world, in which we have a symbiotic relationship with the planet, environmental sustainability is a precondition for poverty eradication, economic development, and social justice.
Our call is for fundamental transformation and innovation in all spheres and at all scales in order to stop and reverse global environmental change and move toward fair and lasting prosperity for present and future generations.
II. Priorities for Coherent Global Action
We recommend a dual track approach:
a) emergency solutions now, that begin to stop and reverse negative environmental trends and redress inequalities within the current inadequate institutional framework, and
b) long term structural solutions that gradually change values, institutions and policy frameworks. We need to support our ability to innovate, adapt, and learn.
1. Reaching a more equitable world
Unequal distribution of the benefits of economic development are at the root of poverty. Despite efforts to address poverty, more than a third of the world’s population still live on less than $2 per day. This needs our immediate attention. Environment and development must go hand in hand. We need to:
- Achieve the Millennium Development Goals, in the spirit of the Millennium Declaration, recognising that global sustainability is a precondition of success.
- Adopt a global contract between industrialized and developing countries to scale up investment in approaches that integrate poverty reduction, climate stabilization, and ecosystem stewardship.
2. Managing the climate – energy challenge
We urge governments to agree on global emission reductions guided by science and embedded in ethics and justice. At the same time, the energy needs of the three billion people who lack access to reliable sources of energy need to be fulfilled. Global efforts need to:
- Keep global warming below 2oC, implying a peak in global CO2 emissions no later than 2015 and recognise that even a warming of 2oC carries a very high risk of serious impacts and the need for major adaptation efforts.
- Put a sufficiently high price on carbon and deliver the G-20 commitment to phase out fossil fuel subsidies, using these funds to contribute to the several hundred billion US dollars per year needed to scale up investments in renewable energy.
3. Creating an efficiency revolution
We must transform the way we use energy and materials. In practice this means massive efforts to enhance energy efficiency and resource productivity, avoiding unintended secondary consequences. The “throw away concept” must give way to systematic efforts to develop circular material flows. We must:
- Introduce strict resource efficiency standards to enable a decoupling of economic growth from resource use.
- Develop new business models, based on radically improved energy and material efficiency.
4. Ensuring affordable food for all
Current food production systems are often unsustainable, inefficient and wasteful, and increasingly threatened by dwindling oil and phosphorus resources, financial speculation, and climate impacts. This is already causing widespread hunger and malnutrition today. We can no longer afford the massive loss of biodiversity and reduction in carbon sinks when ecosystems are converted into cropland. We need to:
- Foster a new agricultural revolution where more food is produced in a sustainable way on current agricultural land and within safe boundaries of water resources.
- Fund appropriate sustainable agricultural technology to deliver significant yield increases on small farms in developing countries.
5. Moving beyond green growth
There are compelling reasons to rethink the conventional model of economic development. Tinkering with the economic system that generated the global crises is not enough. Markets and entrepreneurship will be prime drivers of decision making and economic change, but must be complemented by policy frameworks that promote a new industrial metabolism and resource use. We should:
- Take account of natural capital, ecosystem services and social aspects of progress in all economic decisions and poverty reduction strategies. This requires the development of new welfare indicators that address the shortcomings of GDP.
- Reset economic incentives so that innovation is driven by wider societal interests and reaches the large proportion of the global population that is currently not benefitting from these innovations.
6. Reducing human pressures
Consumerism, inefficient resource use and inappropriate technologies are the primary drivers of humanity’s growing impact on the planet. However, population growth also needs attention. We must:
- Raise public awareness about the impacts of unsustainable consumption and shift away from the prevailing culture of consumerism to sustainability.
- Greatly increase access to reproductive health services, education and credit, aiming at empowering women all over the world. Such measures are important in their own right but will also reduce birth rates.
7. Strengthening Earth System Governance
The multilateral system must be reformed to cope with the defining challenges of our time, namely transforming humanity’s relationship with the planet and rebuilding trust between people and nations. Global governance must be strengthened to respect planetary boundaries and to support regional, national and local approaches. We should:
- Develop and strengthen institutions that can integrate the climate, biodiversity and development agendas.
- Explore new institutions that help to address the legitimate interests of future generations.
8. Enacting a new contract between science and society

Filling gaps in our knowledge and deepening our understanding is necessary to find solutions to the challenges of the Anthropocene, and calls for major investments in science. A dialogue with decision-makers and the general public is also an important part of a new contract between science and society. We need to:


- Launch a major research initiative on the earth system and global sustainability, at a scale similar to those devoted to areas such as space, defense and health, to tap all sources of ingenuity across disciplines and across the globe.
- Scale up our education efforts to increase scientific literacy especially among the young.
We are the first generation facing the evidence of global change. It therefore falls upon us to change our relationship with the planet, in order to tip the scales towards a sustainable world for future generations.

samedi 19 novembre 2011

Climate change worsens extreme weather events

http://www.usatoday.com/weather/climate/globalwarming/story/2011-11-17/report-blames-climate-change-for-more-extreme-weather-events/51276310/1

Report: Climate change worsens extreme weather events

By Dan Vergano and Doyle Rice, USA TODAY

Updated 11h 23m ago

Heat waves, floods and other extreme weather worsen with global warming, suggests a major international climate report released today.

  • Climate-change-worsens-extreme-weather-events-6KJU9LG-x-2011-11-19-12-10.jpg
  • By Aaron Favila, APA man swims in neck-deep floodwaters in Bangkok, Thailand on Nov. 9. Disastrous flooding like what's occuring in Thailand should worsen due to global warming, according to a report released today from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Enlarge

By Aaron Favila, AP

A man swims in neck-deep floodwaters in Bangkok, Thailand on Nov. 9. Disastrous flooding like what's occuring in Thailand should worsen due to global warming, according to a report released today from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, obtained in draft form by USA TODAY, stresses that expanding cities and populations worldwide, also raise the odds of severe impacts from weather disasters.

"Unprecedented extreme weather and climate events" look likely in coming decades as a result of a changing climate, says the draft report. The final version was released early today by IPCC chief Rajendra Pachauri at a meeting hosted by report sponsors, the World Meteorological Organization and United Nations Environment Programme, in Kampala, Uganda.

The IPCC and other scientific groups, such as the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, have reconfirmed over the past decade that greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels, and deforestation, have led to a 1.4-degree rise in average global-surface-temperatures worldwide in the past century. That rise, the IPCC says, is likely to increase, with at least 2-in-3 odds that climate extremes have already worsened because of man-made greenhouse gases.

"The time is now for this report," says University of Illinois climate scientist Don Wuebbles, pointing to recent studies linking climate change to extreme weather. " Scientific studies such as a report in the journal Nature, for example, have linked the deadly 2003 heat wave in Europe to climate change. The IPCC report's projection for the next century:

•Worse heat waves worldwide are "very likely."

•"Medium confidence" exists that droughts will worsen across southern North America, the Mediterranean and elsewhere.

•"High confidence" exists that economic losses from weather disasters are increasing, with huge year-to-year swings, largely due to more people, urbanization and coastal development.

The report is noteworthy for pointing to over-development as the driver for increasing dollar losses from extreme weather events, not climate change, says the University of Colorado's Roger Pielke Jr., a past critic of IPCC reports.

"It's dangerous to blame every extreme weather event on climate change," says Weather Underground meteorologist Jeff Masters, adding that it's often hard to make the case for a connection between one and the other. Even so, Masters says, that climate change is increasing the chances of floods, droughts and heat waves.

This year, there have been 14 billion-dollar U.S. weather disasters, according to global reinsurance firm Aon Benfield, shattering the previous record of nine set in 2008.

Tornadoes, hurricanes and floods in these 14 disasters killed more than 600 people, reports Masters.

mercredi 26 octobre 2011

Shark strikes prompt lethal hunt, even as some call for conservation - The Washington Post

http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/shark-strikes-prompt-lethal-hunt-even-as-some-call-for-conservation/2011/10/24/gIQAjES7GM_story.html?hpid=z2




Shark strikes prompt lethal hunt, even as some call for conservation - The Washington Post

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Sharks have killed four people off Australia in the past 14 months, including three since early September. So when 32-year-old American George Thomas Wainwright was killed Saturday while diving, West Australian authorities issued an order to capture and kill the great white shark involved in the incident. They set six baited lines in waters off Rottnest Island, where Wainwright died, and shifted locations once in hot pursuit. But by Monday, they decided the shark had migrated far offshore, and they abandoned the effort.


The decision by Australian officials to exercise this authority for the first time — despite the target being an otherwise protected species — highlights the contradictory relationship humans now have with sharks. Some people would like to protect them in theory, but it’s harder to do it in practice.


The number of shark-related deaths this year — 13 worldwide — is nearly triple the annual average, prompting some coastal communities to take drastic action. But shark conservation measures are gathering momentum in the United States and abroad, as policymakers and scientists warn that the sea’s most feared predator is in danger of disappearing.


“It’s the ‘Jaws’ effect. There’s something primal about this fear of shark attacks that you don’t have with other animals,” said Maryland Del. Eric G. Luedtke (D-Montgomery), who is drafting a measure that would ban the sale, trade and possession of shark fins in Maryland. Luedtke thinks his bill stands a strong chance of passage next year, and he has watched the Australian hunt with dismay.


“It’s sad to see that, because it’s not going to make you any safer,” he said.


George Burgess, curator of the International Shark Attack File at the Florida Museum of Natural History, said no single factor explains what he called the “big jump” in the number of deaths this year. (The total number of incidents, including non-fatal encounters, 64, is in keeping with previous years.) Warmer waters in places such as the Sea of Japan, also known as the East Sea, could be connected to the unusual shark strikes off Russia, Burgess said, while human activities such as fish farming may have lured sharks to Reunion Island, east of Madagascar, where two deaths occurred.


This weekend’s shark hunt was the fifth this year, according to University of Sydney doctoral researcher Christopher Neff, marking what may be an all-time high. The other ones took place in the Seychelles, Reunion Island, Mexico and Russia. In almost every instance, communities sought to kill sharks after multiple attacks. The searches have had different stated aims: Reunion Island authorities said they were gathering scientific data by killing sharks, while Seychelles officials said they were paying fishermen for dead sharks in hopes of recovering the wedding ring of the British honeymooner who died off their shores. But in each case, officials emphasized they were seeking to protect the public.


Page 2 of 2


In a statement, West Australian Fisheries Minister Norman Moore told The Washington Post that the multiple attacks were “an unprecedented circumstance which required an unprecedented response,” noting that his task was complicated because many people approach the waters of Rottnest Island from boats and might not see beach signs or patrols. He added, “There is no order to cull sharks — there is an exemption under the [law] that has always been there to take an endangered species if or when it poses an imminent threat to human life.”


Several experts, including Burgess, questioned whether targeting an individual shark would enhance human safety. More than 100 marine biologists wrote to Moore, as well as other state and local authorities, urging them to “realize that a shark cull would be disastrous not only to our marine environment but also Australia’s reputation as a world leader in marine conservation.”


A 1994 scientific study of shark-control efforts that Hawaii undertook between 1959 and 1976 found the measures killed “4,668 sharks at an average cost of $182 per shark.” But the authors concluded that they did little to affect tiger sharks, which were most likely to attack humans.


“Shark hunts are an example of a political effort to reduce the public perception of risk rather than real risk reduction,” Neff wrote in an e-mail. He added that governments would be better off investing in warning flags, message boards and announcements that “allow beach goers to see the ocean in a more complete way.”


Chuck Anderson, who lost his right arm to a bull shark in 2000 off Gulf Shores, Ala., urged his friends not to hunt down the shark he encountered. “What right do we have — even having my right arm ripped off — to start advocating to kill sharks, just to make us feel safer?” he asked.


Environmentalists have won a series of new protections for sharks this year, arguing that the predators have been decimated by indiscriminate industrial fishing and fishing for their fins, which are used in shark’s fin soup, an Asian delicacy. Between 26 million and 73 million sharks a year are targeted for their fins, scientists say, and roughly a third of all shark species face some threat of extinction.


California Gov. Jerry Brown (D) signed a shark fin ban this month, joining Washington, Oregon and Hawaii. Groups such as the National Aquarium are pushing for Maryland to become the first state on the East Coast to enact such a ban. Toronto, Canada’s largest city, enacted a similar ban Tuesday.


Andy Dehart, the National Aquarium’s director of fishes, said the group is pushing for legislation because after tagging sharks in Delaware Bay and maintaining them in captivity for 30 years, he and others are convinced that “they’re not well-suited for the pressure of a fishery that the shark fin trade is doing to them.”


In Florida, the state’s Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission is poised to vote Nov. 16 to ban the harvest of tiger sharks and scalloped, smooth and great hammerhead sharks in state waters. Academics, such as University of Miami Rosenstiel School professor Neil Hammerschlag, who studies sharks off the Keys, have pushed for the measure.


But to people like George Wainwright, who lives in Panama City, Fla., protecting sharks seems like an anathema in the wake of his son’s recent death. “I can only say I wish I was there,” he said in a phone interview. “There has to be somewhere where you see people as more important than this shark.”

dimanche 23 octobre 2011

Shark Attacks In 2010 Rose By 25%

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/09/shark-attack-numbers-on-t_n_820406.html



Shark Attacks In 2010 Rose By 25%
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The Huffington Post  Joanna Zelman  First Posted: 02/ 9/11 09:03 AM ET Updated: 04/11/11 05:12 AM ET


  Animals , 2010 Shark Attacks , How Many Shark Attacks In 2010 , Shark Attack File , Shark Attack Numbers , Shark Attack Statistics , Shark Attacks , Shark Attacks 2010 , Green News




It seems the sharks have decided to even out the shoreline playing field a bit. According to MSNBC, as shark attack numbers declined in the "shark capital of the world," shark attacks increased globally.
The University of Florida's International Shark Attack File released their annual report on Monday, and found that 79 attacks were reported in 2010, up 25% from the previous year.
While Florida saw its fourth straight decline with 13 attacks, the U.S. still led in numbers with 36 total attacks this year. They were followed by Australia (14) and South Africa (8).
But the oddest occurrence, which file director George Burgess deemed "the most unusual shark incident of my career," was when five shark attacks occurred in the Red Sea off Egypt's coast in December. These bizarre attacks may have occurred due to a combination of high water temperatures, dead sheep in the water, and divers feeding the animals.
So who is attacked by sharks? It's not normally the skinny dipping crowd, unlike what Jaws may have audiences believe. In reality, over half of all shark attacks globally involved surfers.
An average of five people per year are killed by sharks. Meanwhile, fishing fleets kill up to 70 million sharks per year. Given these statistics, Burgess suggests, "The sea is actually very forgiving, certainly from the standpoint of the animal life."
Less than a month ago, environmental groups accused 20 countries of failing to protect sharks from the threat of extinction. Sharks are late to mature and produce few young, making it difficult to replenish their population. 30% of all shark species are threatened or nearly threatened with extinction. When sharks are overfished, not only is the species affected, but major ecosystems are disrupted. While it seems unlikely that humans can negotiate a peace treaty with the sharks, people can at least take steps to preserve marine life's delicate balance.

jeudi 20 octobre 2011

An Economist for Nature Calculates the Need for More Protection

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An Economist for Nature Calculates the Need for More Protection


By JOHN MOIR
Published: August 8, 2011
  • COTO BRUS, Costa Rica — Dawn is breaking over this remote upland region, where neat rows of coffee plants cover many of the hillsides. The rising tropical sun saturates the landscape with color, revealing island like remnants of native forest scattered among the coffee plantations.
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Charles J. Katz, Jr.


A GLOBAL FOCUS Gretchen Daily, a Stanford biology professor, in Palo Alto, Calif.
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But across this bucolic countryside, trouble is brewing. An invasive African insect known as the coffee berry borer is threatening the area’s crops. Local farmers call the pest “la broca”: the borer.
Despite the early hour, Gretchen Daily, a Stanford University biology professor, is already at work studying this complex ecosystem. Amid a cacophony of birdsong, Dr. Daily and her team are conducting experiments that demonstrate the vital connection between wildlife and native vegetation. Preliminary data from new studies suggest that consumption of insects like la broca by forest-dwelling birds and bats contribute significantly to coffee yields.
Since 1991, Dr. Daily, 46, has made frequent trips to this Costa Rican site to conduct one of the tropics’ most comprehensive population-level studies to monitor long-term ecological change.
“We are working to very specifically quantify in biophysical and dollar terms the value of conserving the forest and its wildlife,” she said.
In recent years, Dr. Daily has expanded her research to include a global focus. She is one of the pioneers in the growing worldwide effort to protect the environment by quantifying the value of “natural capital” — nature’s goods and services that are fundamental for human life — and factoring these benefits into the calculations of businesses and governments. Dr. Daily’s work has attracted international attention and has earned her some of the world’s most coveted environmental awards.
Part of Dr. Daily’s interest in natural capital emerged from her research in Costa Rica, where she became intrigued with an innovative government initiative known as Payment for Environmental Services. The program, initiated in the 1990s, pays landowners to maintain native forest rather than cut it and has contributed to a significant reduction in Costa Rica’s deforestation rate.
The Costa Rican program helped inspire Dr. Daily to co-found the Natural Capital Project in 2006. NatCap, as the program is known, is a venture led by Stanford University, the University of Minnesota and two of the world’s largest conservation organizations, the Nature Conservancy and the World Wildlife Fund. It aims to transform traditional conservation methods by including the value of “ecosystem services” in business, community and government decisions. These benefits from nature — like flood protection, crop pollination and carbon storage — are not part of the traditional economic equation.
“Currently, there is no price for most of the ecosystem services we care about, like clean air and clean water,” said Stephen Polasky, professor of ecological/environmental economics at the University of Minnesota. He says that because economic calculations often ignore nature, the results can lead to the destruction of the very ecosystems upon which the economy is based.
“Our economic system values land for two primary reasons,” said Adam Davis, a partner in Ecosystem Investment Partners, a company that manages high-priority conservation properties. “One is building on the land, and the second is taking things from the land.”
“Right now, the way a forest is worth money is by cutting it down,” Mr. Davis said. “We measure that value in board-feet of lumber or tons of pulp sold to a paper mill.” What has been missing, he says, is a countervailing economic force that measures the value of leaving a forest or other ecosystem intact.
Early on, Dr. Daily recognized that new tools were needed to quantify nature’s value. “We began by developing a software program called InVEST (Integrated Valuation of Ecosystem Services and Trade-offs) to map and value nature’s goods and services that are essential for humans,” she said.
The software, which is available as a free download, enables the comparison of various environmental scenarios. What is the real cost of draining a wetland or clearing a coastline of mangroves? InVEST models the trade-offs and helps decision makers better understand the implications of their choices.
“Our dream was not to try to capture the full value of nature’s services, because that’s so hard to do,” Dr. Daily said. “Our goal is to begin making inroads in the decision-making process by including at least some of the value of nature in the economic equation.”
The Natural Capital Project now works in Latin America, Africa, Asia, the Pacific and North America. In China, NatCap is working with the government on an ambitious program to protect natural capital. After deforestation caused extensive flooding in 1998, China committed $100 billion to convert vast areas of cropland back into forest and grassland. The government is building on this success by helping to develop and test the InVEST software to put in place a new reserve network that is projected to span 25 percent of the country. The reserves will help with flood control, irrigation, drinking supply, hydropower production, biodiversity and climate stabilization.
At a NatCap site in Hawaii, Kamehameha Schools, the state’s largest private landowner, used InVEST to evaluate future land use for a 26,000-acre site on the North Shore of Oahu. In the past, the landholding had been used for aquaculture, crops and habitation. After examining the alternatives modeled by InVEST, Kamehameha Schools selected a diversified mix of forestry and agriculture intended to improve water quality, sequester carbon and generate income.
About seven months ago, Google.org, the philanthropic arm of Google.com, unveiled a powerful new tool that enables global-scale monitoring and measurement of changes in the earth’s environment. Called Google Earth Engine, it features a huge trove of satellite imagery of the earth’s surface. NatCap is now moving the InVEST software onto the Google Earth Engine platform.
“Right now, when we do a NatCap project or use InVEST, we send people to a country or state, and they spend weeks accumulating the data and putting it in the right format,” said Peter Kareiva, vice president and chief scientist for the Nature Conservancy. Google Earth Engine will greatly speed the analysis process, Dr. Kareiva said.
Luis Solórzano, program director of environmental science at the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, who worked on Google Earth Engine, says that the new tool can map trends and allow scientists to forecast such things as soil fertility, erosion and deforestation. “It’s the kind of tool policy makers need to make informed decisions,” Dr. Solórzano said.
Because the natural capital concept is anthropocentric, Dr. Daily sometimes is asked whether quantifying ecosystem services runs the risk of ignoring nature’s intrinsic worth or overlooking difficult-to-measure aspects of the natural world, like aesthetic or spiritual benefits.
Dr. Daily acknowledges that certain properties of nature defy quantification. “The beauty of the natural capital approach is it leaves the vast, immeasurable aspects of nature in their own realm while focusing in a very practical way on environmental benefits that we can and should incorporate into our current decisions.”
The precarious state of the world’s environment has concerned Dr. Daily since her teenage years, when her family lived in West Germany and she witnessed the destructive power of acid rain on the country’s forests. “I realized then that I wanted to be a scientist,” she said. This early fascination with nature led to her passion for the forests of Costa Rica, and that in turn set the course for her international leadership with natural capital.
Dr. Daily’s work took on a special urgency with the 2005 publication of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, which was developed under the auspices of the United Nations. This report found that recent and rapid human-caused changes have produced a “substantial and largely irreversible loss” in the diversity of life on earth and that two-thirds of the world’s ecosystem services were declining.
“The loss of earth’s biodiversity is permanent,” Dr. Daily said. “And it is happening on our watch. We need to convey with compelling evidence the value of nature and the cost of losing it. I find it stunning that until the next asteroid hits the planet, it is humanity that is collectively deciding the future course of all known life.”


A version of this article appeared in print on August 9, 2011, on page D3 of the New York edition with the headline: An Economist for Nature Calculates the Need for More Protection.

samedi 1 octobre 2011

http://www.negawatt.org/telechargement/Presse//negaWattLeMonde30092011.pdf

En 2050, une France sans émissions
deCO2 ninucléaire?
Selon les experts de l’association NégaWatt, un scénario énergétique vertueux est possible
Sortir du nucléaire et réduire drastiquement les émissions de gaz à effet de serre tout en
conservant un mode de vie moder- ne, c’est possible, selon NégaWatt. Cette association d’ingénieurs et d’experts des questions de l’éner- gie a publié, jeudi 29 septembre, son scénario de la situation énergé- tique française en 2050.
Elle avait déjà publié, en 2003 et 2006, deux scénarios fondés sur la recherche d’une solution énergéti- que passant par la réduction des émissions de gaz à effet de serre et l’abandon du nucléaire. Le scéna- rio présenté aujourd’hui, mis en chantier il y a plus d’un an, intègre une méthodologie beaucoup plus développée et de nouvelles préoc- cupations sociales.
« Habituellement, explique Thierry Salomon, président de NégaWatt, le monde de l’énergie part des ressources. Il faut inverser le raisonnement, en analysant d’abord les usages et les besoins. »
Les experts ont donc bâti leur modèle à partir des principaux besoins en énergie (chauffage, mobilité, éclairage et appareils élec- triques) qu’ils ont transposés par secteur d’activité (habitat, tertiai- re, transports, industrie et agricul- ture), cherchant dans chaque cas la meilleure solution énergétique.
La France consomme aujour- d’hui près de 3 000 térawatt-heu- re (TWh) d’énergie, dont près d’un tiers se dissipe sous forme d’eau chaude dans l’atmosphère ou dans les rivières, par les centrales thermiques. NégaWatt prévoit une diminution à moins de
1 000 TWh en 2050. La clé de cette performance réside dans une poli- tique plaçant l’accent sur la sobrié- té et l’efficacité énergétique.
Le principal gisement se situe dans le bâtiment, où une politique durable de rénovation thermique (au rythme de 750 000 logements traités par an) permettrait de rédui- re la consommation de 600 TWh.
« Réparabilité »
Le transport est aussi riche d’un fort potentiel d’économies, tant par des progrès techniques (consom- mation des véhicules ramenée à 2,5 l/100 km) que par la limitation de l’étalement urbain et la stimula- tion des transports « doux » (vélo, véhicules au gaz naturel) et collec- tifs. L’industrie peut aussi progres- ser, notamment en développant le recyclage des matériaux et la « répa- rabilité » des objets.
Le scénario envisage une ferme- ture progressive des réacteurs nucléaires qui s’achèverait en 2033, les énergies renouvelables – au premier rang desquelles le bois – prenant la relève.
L’exercice repose autant sur les évolutions techniques que sociéta- les. Il s’appuie aussi sur l’agricultu- re, notamment en promouvant la réduction de la consommation de viande, qui libérerait des terres pour la production de biogaz.
NégaWatt veut alimenter le débat politique de 2012. Il présente- ra, début octobre, son scénario au Parti socialiste et à Europe Ecolo- gie-Les Verts. Ainsi qu’à l’UMP et à d’autres, s’ils le désirent. p
Hervé Kempf

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page1image16540-2011-10-1-10-09.png




















2 500

2 000

1 500

1 000

500

0
Le scénario énergétique de NégaWatt
D’ici à 2050, économies d’énergie et sources renouvelables compensent la chute du nucléaire et des fossiles
ÉVOLUTION DES SOURCES D’ÉNERGIE PRIMAIRE, en térawatts-heure
Energies renouvelables Pétrole Charbon
3 000
2 965
Uranium Gaz naturel
Sobriété
Efficacité (consommation)
Efficacité (production)
1 028 TWh
page1image22392-2011-10-1-10-09.png page1image23492-2011-10-1-10-09.png


page1image23852-2011-10-1-10-09.png page1image24072-2011-10-1-10-09.png page1image24292-2011-10-1-10-09.png page1image24512-2011-10-1-10-09.png
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page1image25348-2011-10-1-10-09.png

2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050
SOURCE : NÉGAWATT

Sea Shepherd: “Les surfais réunionnais, une honte pour la communauté mondiale du surf”

http://www.zinfos974.com/Sea-Shepherd-Les-surfers-reunionnais-une-honte-pour-la-communaute-mondiale-du-surf_a32635.html

Sea Shepherd: “Les surfais réunionnais, une honte pour la communauté mondiale du surf”

Dans le même thème…
  1. Requin : Baignade toujours interdite à Boucan Canot, les prélèvement stoppés
  2. Photos et vidéo du requin bouledogue de 2,44m et 156kg pêché à Boucan
  3. Prélèvements de requins: Lettre ouverte du “Collectif pour la Protection de l’océan indien”
  4. Chasse au requin, toujours pas de prise pour les pêcheurs
  5. Prélèvements de requins : Brigitte Bardot écrit au préfet !
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Sea Shepherd Conservation Society (SSCS) est une ONG (organisation non-gouvernementale) américaine créée en 1977 qui a pour objectif la conservation de la faune et de la flore marines.


“Notre mission est de mettre un terme à la destruction des écosystèmes marins et au massacre des espèces dans le but de conserver et de protéger la biodiversité des océans du monde entier. Nous mettons en place des stratégies novatrices d’action directe pour enquêter, documenter et intervenir si nécessaire afin d’exposer et de combattre les activités illégales de haute mer. En sauvegardant la biodiversité, nous nous efforçons de préserver la survie de nos fragiles écosystèmes marins pour les futures générations”, explique l’ONG sur son site Internet.


Elle possède plusieurs bateaux sur les différents océans du monde et intervient, parfois de façon violente, grâce à un mandat dévolu par la Charte Mondiale pour la Nature des Nations Unies.


SSCS possède depuis 2006 une antenne en France, présidée par Lamya Essemlali. Hier, cette dernière a publié un article sur le site Internet français de l’ONG intitulé : “Les surfais réunionnais, une honte pour la communauté mondiale du surf”. Retrouvez-le ci-dessous en intégralité :


“En tant que femme Française, je suis profondément choquée de l’attitude de certains de mes concitoyens Réunionnais.


En effet, on dirait bien qu’une partie des surfais de la Réunion ne soient rien d’autre qu’une bande de froussards vindicatifs.


Le 19 septembre dernier, un requin a attaqué et tué le body surfer Mathieu Schiller âgé de 32 ans. Cet accident est une tragédie que nous regrettons tous mais il ne s’agissait aucunement d’un acte de malice.


C’est le genre de chose qui peut arriver. Pour un requin, vu de dessous la surface, un homme sur une planche ressemble à s’y méprendre à la silhouette d’un phoque.


Les phoques et les requins font partie de ce milieu naturel et les phoques sont la proie naturelle des requins. Les surfais en revanche, ne font pas partie de l’éco-système marin.


Les requins restent confinés à leur milieu naturel et ils n’investissent jamais le nôtre. Le nombre moyen de personnes tuées chaque année par les requins dans le monde est de cinq. A titre de comparaison, les autruches tuent en moyenne une centaine de personnes, ce qui veut dire que les autruches sont vingt fois plus dangereuses que les requins. Et pourtant on ne voit pas beaucoup de gens crier au scandale et exiger la “chasse préventive” des autruches…


En fait n’importe quel joueur de golf s’avère être plus courageux et viril que le surfer Réunionais moyen. Plus de golfeurs sont tués chaque année, frappés par la foudre sur un terrain de golf qu’il n’y a de surfais qui meurent des suites d’une attaque de requin.


Sea Shepherd Conservation Society est soutenue par de nombreux surfais dans le monde. Kelly Slater et Dave Rastovich, deux des meilleurs surfais mondiaux font partie du Bureau des Conseillers de Sea Shepherd. Nous avons trois femmes plongeuses qui nagent régulièrement avec des grands blancs et des requins tigres et nos équipages surfent et nagent avec des requins à longueur de temps.


Mais sans doute est ce parce que nous ne sommes pas faits du même bois que ce groupe de surfais pleurnichards de la Réunion qui sont tellement déconnectés de la réalité qu’ils se sont lancés dans cette chasse aux sorcière décérébrée, en quête de vengeance, suite à l’attaque récente d’un surfer.

⠊⠠L’hystérie ambiante a déjà commencé à s’exprimer avec le lâche abattage d’une dizaine de requins à la Réunion et ça n’est apparemment qu’un début.


Comparez donc cette réaction à celle de la jeune adolescente Hannah Mighmal, âgée alors de quinze ans, mordue par un requin en Tasmanie, il y a deux ans. La première chose qu’elle fit fut de déclarer publiquement qu’elle ne voulait pas que l’on tue de requins en représailles, car ils ne sont pas fautifs. Nous lui avons remis une médaille et Kelly Slater l’a personnellement félicitée pour avoir compris que les surfais se doivent de respecter la Nature et non la mépriser.


Ou encore le cas de ce membre de Sea Shepherd, mort récemment à la suite d’une attaque de requin. Il avait dit à ses parents que si un requin s’en prenait un jour à lui, il ne voulait pas qu’on cherche à le venger et qu’au contraire, il souhaitait que tous les soutiens qu’ils pourraient recevoir soient reversés à Sea Shepherd pour nos campagnes de protection des requins.


Chaque année, les humains exterminent 90 millions de requins, une grande partie d’entre eux voient leurs ailerons arrachés avant d’être rejetés à la mer, promis à une mort lente et douloureuse.


Les requins sont une espèce essentielle à la santé de nos océans et seuls des ignorants peuvent souhaiter les voir disparaître. Si nous éliminons les requins, nous détruisons l’intégrité écologique des océans et si les océans meurent, nous mourrons avec eux. Ce qui veut dire aussi, plus de surfer boys.


En tant que femme Française, je reste perplexe devant ces pseudos surfais français qui réclament hystériquement le lynchage des requins dans les eaux réunionnaises quand une vraie surfeuse comme la jeune Hannah Mighmal, âgée de quinze ans a le courage et la sagesse d’accepter le responsabilité qui est la sienne, lorsqu’elle prend le risque conscient et volontaire de surfer dans l’habitat naturel des requins littéralement déguisée en la proie naturelle des requins.


Qu’il est insultant à la mémoire de Mathieu Shiller que le massacre de ces magnifiques créatures soit mené en son nom.


Mathieu Shiller était un grand surfer et en tant que tel, je présume qu’il respectait la mer et les magnifiques créatures qui la peuplent - requins compris. Comment vous, surfais de la Réunion pouvez vous croire faire honneur à la mémoire de ce grand homme, de ce talentueux surfer en menant cette campagne indigne de vengeance à l’encontre d’une créature cruciale et magnifique qui n’a rien fait d’autre que de se comporter de manière naturelle.


Après tout, les requins ne nous pourchassent pas sans pitié par millions pour concocter un bol de soupe. Ils ne sont ni destructeurs, ni vindicatifs comme nous le sommes avec à peu près tout ce qui vit dans les océans.


Faites donc ce qui est juste pour Mathieu Shiller. Honorez sa vie au lieu de déshonorer son nom avec votre insensée chasse aux sorcière à l’encontre de créatures qui ne méritent pas un tel sort.


Par Lamya Essemlali, Présidente de Sea Shepherd France”


Vendredi 30 Septembre 2011 - 10:23

vendredi 30 septembre 2011

Companies Use Immigration Crackdown to Turn a Profit

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/29/world/asia/getting-tough-on-immigrants-to-turn-a-profit.html?_r=1

Companies Use Immigration Crackdown to Turn a Profit

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Rick Rycroft/Associated Press


The Woomera Detention Center, in Australia, was the scene of a detainee breakout in 2002.
By NINA BERNSTEIN
Published: September 28, 2011
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The men showed up in a small town in Australia’s outback early last year, offering top dollar for all available lodgings. Within days, their company, Serco, was flying in recruits from as far away as London, and busing them from trailers to work 12-hour shifts as guards in a remote camp where immigrants seeking asylum are indefinitely detained.
  1. DOCUMENT: Reports About Australia’s Privately Run Immigration Detention System
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  3. Times Topic: Immigration Detention (U.S.)
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Andrew Quilty for The New York Times


Australia has relied on private security companies to run immigrant detention centers in places like Perth.

It was just a small part of a pattern on three continents where a handful of multinational security companies have been turning crackdowns on immigration into a growing global industry.
Especially in Britain, the United States and Australia, governments of different stripes have increasingly looked to such companies to expand detention and show voters they are enforcing tougher immigration laws.
Some of the companies are huge — one is among the largest private employers in the world — and they say they are meeting demand faster and less expensively than the public sector could.
But the ballooning of privatized detention has been accompanied by scathing inspection reports, lawsuits and the documentation of widespread abuse and neglect, sometimes lethal. Human rights groups say detention has neither worked as a deterrent nor speeded deportation, as governments contend, and some worry about the creation of a “detention-industrial complex” with a momentum of its own.
“They’re very good at the glossy brochure,” said Kaye Bernard, general secretary of the union of detention workers on the Australian territory of Christmas Island, where riots erupted this year between asylum seekers and guards. “On the ground, it’s almost laughable, the chaos and the inability to function.”
Private prisons in the United States have long stirred controversy. But while there have been conflicting studies about their costs and benefits, no systematic comparisons exist for immigration detention, say scholars like Matthew J. Gibney, a political scientist at the University of Oxford who tracks immigration systems.
Still, Mr. Gibney and others say the pitfalls of outsourcing immigration enforcement have become evident in the past 15 years. “When something goes wrong — a death, an escape — the government can blame it on a kind of market failure instead of an accountability failure,” he said.
In the United States — with almost 400,000 annual detentions in 2010, up from 280,000 in 2005 — private companies now control nearly half of all detention beds, compared with only 8 percent in state and federal prisons, according to government figures. In Britain, 7 of 11 detention centers and most short-term holding places for immigrants are run by for-profit contractors.
No country has more completely outsourced immigration enforcement, with more troubled results, than Australia. Under unusually severe mandatory detention laws, the system has been run by a succession of three publicly traded companies since 1998. All three are now major players in the international business of locking up and transporting unwanted foreigners.
The first, the Florida-based prison company GEO Group, lost its Australia contract in 2003 amid a commission’s findings that detained children were subjected to cruel treatment. An Australian government audit reported that the contract had not delivered “value-for-money.” In the United States, GEO controls 7,000 of 32,000 detention beds.
The second company, G4S, an Anglo-Danish security conglomerate with more than 600,000 employees in 125 countries, was faulted for lethal neglect and abusive use of solitary confinement in Australia. By the middle of the past decade, after refugee children had sewed their lips together during hunger strikes in camps like Woomera and Curtin, and government commissions discovered that Australian citizens and legal residents were being wrongly detained and deported, protests pushed the Liberal Party government to dismantle some aspects of the system.
But after promising to return the work to the public sector, a Labor government awarded a five-year, $370 million contract to Serco in 2009. The value of the contract has since soared beyond $756 million as detention sites quadrupled, to 24, and the number of detainees ballooned to 6,700 from 1,000.
Dangerous Problems
Over the past year, riots, fires and suicidal protests left millions of dollars in damage at Serco-run centers from Christmas Island to Villawood, outside Sydney, and self-harm by detainees rose twelvefold, government documents show. In August, a government inspection report cited dangerous overcrowding, inadequate and ill-trained staff, no crisis planning and no requirement that Serco add employees when population exceeded capacity.
At the detention center Serco runs in Villawood, immigrants spoke of long, open-ended detentions making them crazy. Alwy Fadhel, 33, an Indonesian Christian who said he needed asylum from Islamic persecution, had long black hair coming out in clumps after being held for more than three years, in and out of solitary confinement.
“We talk to ourselves,” Mr. Fadhel said. “We talk to the mirror; we talk to the wall.”
Naomi Leong, a shy 9-year-old, was born in the detention camp. For more than three years, at a cost of about $380,000, she and her mother were held behind its barbed wire. Psychiatrists said Naomi was growing up mute, banging her head against the walls while her mother, Virginia Leong, a Malaysian citizen accused of trying to use a false passport, sank into depression.
Naomi and her mother became a cause célèbre in protests against the mandatory detention system, leading to their release in 2005 on rare humanitarian visas. They are now citizens.
“I come here to give little bit of hope to the people,” Ms. Leong said during a recent visit to Villawood, where posters display the governing principles of Serco, beginning with “We foster an entrepreneurial culture.”
Free-Market Solutions
Companies often say that losing a contract is the ultimate accountability
.
“We are acutely aware of our responsibilities and are committed to the humane, fair and decent treatment of all those in our care,” a Serco spokesman said in an e-mail. “We will continue to work with our customers around the world and seek to improve the services we provide for them.”
But lost detention contracts are rare and easily replaced in this fast-growing business. Serco’s $10 billion portfolio includes many other businesses, from air traffic control and visa processing in the United States, to nuclear weapons maintenance, video surveillance and welfare-to-work programs in Britain, where it also operates several prisons and two “immigration removal centers.”
“If one area or territory slows down, we can move where the growth is,” Christopher Hyman, Serco’s chief executive, told investors last year, after reporting a 35 percent increase in profits. This spring, Serco reported a 13 percent profit rise.
Its rival G4S delivers cash to banks on most continents, runs airport security in 80 countries and has 1,500 employees in immigration enforcement in Britain, the Netherlands and the United States, where its services include escorting illegal border-crossers back to Mexico for the Department of Homeland Security.
Nick Buckles, the chief executive of G4S, would not discuss the company. But last year he told analysts how its “justice” business in the Netherlands blossomed in one week after the 2002 assassination of a politician with an anti-immigrant and law-and-order agenda.
“There’s nothing like a political crisis to stimulate a bit of change,” Mr. Buckles said.
In Britain last fall, the company came under criminal investigation in the asphyxiation of an Angolan man who died as three G4S escorts held him down on a British Airways flight. Soon afterward, British immigration authorities announced that the company had lost its bid to renew a $48 million deportation escort contract because it was underbid by a competitor.
Even so, G4S has more than $1.1 billion in government contracts in Britain, a spokesman said, only about $126 million from the immigration authority. It quickly replaced the lost revenue with contracts to build, lease and run more police jails and prisons.
In 2007, Western Australia’s Human Rights Commission found that G4S drivers had ignored the cries of detainees locked in a scorching van, leaving them so dehydrated that one drank his own urine. The company was ordered to pay $500,000 for inhumane treatment, but three of the five victims already had been deported. Immigration officials, relying on company misinformation, had dismissed their complaints without investigation, the commission found.
There was a public outcry when an Aboriginal man died in another G4S van in similar circumstances the next year. A coroner ruled in 2009 that G4S, the drivers and the government shared the blame. The company was later awarded a $70 million, five-year prisoner transport contract in another state, Victoria, without competition.
G4S pleaded guilty to negligence in the van death this year, and was fined $285,000. Mr. Buckles, its chief executive, alluded to the case at a meeting with analysts in March, reassuring them.
“There is only two or three major players, typically sometimes only two people bidding,” Mr. Buckles said. “In time, we will become a winner in that market because there’s a lot of outsourcing opportunities and not many competitors.”
In August, when GEO, the Florida prison company, posted a 40 percent rise in second-quarter profits, its executives in Boca Raton spoke of new immigration business on both sides of the Atlantic.
John M. Hurley, a GEO executive for North American operations, cited “the continued growth in the criminal alien population,” larger facilities, and longer federal contracts, some up to 20 years.
At the company’s Reeves County Detention Center in Texas, immigrant inmates rioted in 2009 and 2010 after several detainees died in solitary confinement. GEO executives declined to comment. But speaking to shareholders, they credited much of the quarter’s $10 million increase in international revenue to the expansion of a detention center in Britain, where immigration was a hot issue in the 2010 election.
A Policy Backfires
“Britain is no longer a soft touch,” Damian Green, the immigration minister, said in August 2010 when he visited the center, near Heathrow Airport, reopening wings that had burned in 2006 during detainee riots under a different private operator.
The riots started the day the chief inspector of prisons released a blistering report about abuses there, including excessive waits for deportation. Months after Mr. Green’s appearance, an independent monitoring board complained that at the expanded center — now Europe’s largest, with 610 detainees — at least 35 men had been waiting more than a year to be deported, including one locked up for three years and seven months at a cost of at least $237,000.
The camp that Serco took over in the Australian outback, the Curtin Immigration Detention Center, had also been shut down amid riots and hunger strikes in 2002. But it was reopened last year to handle a surge of asylum seekers arriving by boat even as the government imposed a moratorium on processing their claims.
Refurbished for 300 men, the camp sits on an old air force base and held more than 1,500 detainees in huts and tents behind an electrified fence. Serco guards likened the compound to a free-range chicken farm.
On March 28, a 19-year-old Afghan from a group persecuted by the Taliban hanged himself after 10 months’ detention — the system’s fifth suicide in seven months. A dozen guards, short of sleep and training, found themselves battling hundreds of grieving, angry detainees for the teenager’s body.
“We have lost control,” said Richard Harding, who served for a decade as Western Australia’s chief prison inspector. He is no enemy of privatization, and his praise for a Serco-run prison is posted on the company’s Web site. But he said Curtin today was emblematic of “a flawed arrangement that’s going to go wrong no matter who’s running it.”
“These big global companies, in relation to specific activities, are more powerful than the governments they’re dealing with,” he added.

Matt Siegel contributed reporting from Sydney, Australia.

A version of this article appeared in print on September 29, 2011, on page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: Getting Tough On Immigrants To Turn a Profit.

dimanche 25 septembre 2011

Global Warming: Why Americans Are In Denial

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/24/global-warming-why-americans-deny_n_979177.html

Global Warming: Why Americans Are In Denial
CHARLES J. HANLEY   09/24/11 02:45 PM ET  
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  Climate Change Denial ,   Climate Change Skeptics ,   Climate-Change , Global Warming Denial , Climate Change Americans , Climate Skeptics , Global Warming Americans , Green News


NEW YORK — Tucked between treatises on algae and prehistoric turquoise beads, the study on page 460 of a long-ago issue of the U.S. journal Science drew little attention.
“I don’t think there were any newspaper articles about it or anything like that,” the author recalls.
But the headline on the 1975 report was bold: “Are We on the Brink of a Pronounced Global Warming?” And this article that coined the term may have marked the last time a mention of “global warming” didn’t set off an instant outcry of angry denial.
___
EDITOR’S NOTE: Climate change has already provoked debate in a U.S. presidential campaign barely begun. An Associated Press journalist draws on decades of climate reporting to offer a retrospective and analysis on global warming and the undying urge to deny.
___
In the paper, Columbia University geoscientist Wally Broecker calculated how much carbon dioxide would accumulate in the atmosphere in the coming 35 years, and how temperatures consequently would rise. His numbers have proven almost dead-on correct. Meanwhile, other powerful evidence poured in over those decades, showing the “greenhouse effect” is real and is happening. And yet resistance to the idea among many in the U.S. appears to have hardened.
What’s going on?
“The desire to disbelieve deepens as the scale of the threat grows,” concludes economist-ethicist Clive Hamilton.
He and others who track what they call “denialism” find that its nature is changing in America, last redoubt of climate naysayers. It has taken on a more partisan, ideological tone. Polls find a widening Republican-Democratic gap on climate. Republican presidential candidate Rick Perry even accuses climate scientists of lying for money. Global warming looms as a debatable question in yet another U.S. election campaign.
From his big-windowed office overlooking the wooded campus of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in Palisades, N.Y., Broecker has observed this deepening of the desire to disbelieve.
“The opposition by the Republicans has gotten stronger and stronger,” the 79-year-old “grandfather of climate science” said in an interview. “But, of course, the push by the Democrats has become stronger and stronger, and as it has become a more important issue, it has become more polarized.”
The solution: “Eventually it’ll become damned clear that the Earth is warming and the warming is beyond anything we have experienced in millions of years, and people will have to admit…” He stopped and laughed.
“Well, I suppose they could say God is burning us up.”
The basic physics of anthropogenic – manmade – global warming has been clear for more than a century, since researchers proved that carbon dioxide traps heat. Others later showed CO2 was building up in the atmosphere from the burning of coal, oil and other fossil fuels. Weather stations then filled in the rest: Temperatures were rising.
“As a physicist, putting CO2 into the air is good enough for me. It’s the physics that convinces me,” said veteran Cambridge University researcher Liz Morris. But she said work must go on to refine climate data and computer climate models, “to convince the deeply reluctant organizers of this world.”
The reluctance to rein in carbon emissions revealed itself early on.
In the 1980s, as scientists studied Greenland’s buried ice for clues to past climate, upgraded their computer models peering into the future, and improved global temperature analyses, the fossil-fuel industries were mobilizing for a campaign to question the science.
By 1988, NASA climatologist James Hansen could appear before a U.S. Senate committee and warn that global warming had begun, a dramatic announcement later confirmed by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), a new, U.N.-sponsored network of hundreds of international scientists.
But when Hansen was called back to testify in 1989, the White House of President George H.W. Bush edited this government scientist’s remarks to water down his conclusions, and Hansen declined to appear.
That was the year U.S. oil and coal interests formed the Global Climate Coalition to combat efforts to shift economies away from their products. Britain’s Royal Society and other researchers later determined that oil giant Exxon disbursed millions of dollars annually to think tanks and a handful of supposed experts to sow doubt about the facts.
In 1997, two years after the IPCC declared the “balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate,” the world’s nations gathered in Kyoto, Japan, to try to do something about it. The naysayers were there as well.
“The statement that we’ll have continued warming with an increase in CO2 is opinion, not fact,” oil executive William F. O’Keefe of the Global Climate Coalition insisted to reporters in Kyoto.
The late Bert Bolin, then IPCC chief, despaired.
“I’m not really surprised at the political reaction,” the Swedish climatologist told The Associated Press. “I am surprised at the way some of the scientific findings have been rejected in an unscientific manner.”
In fact, a document emerged years later showing that the industry coalition’s own scientific team had quietly advised it that the basic science of global warming was indisputable.
Kyoto’s final agreement called for limited rollbacks in greenhouse emissions. The United States didn’t even join in that. And by 2000, the CO2 built up in the atmosphere to 369 parts per million – just 4 ppm less than Broecker predicted – compared with 280 ppm before the industrial revolution.
Global temperatures rose as well, by 0.6 degrees C (1.1 degrees F) in the 20th century. And the mercury just kept rising. The decade 2000-2009 was the warmest on record, and 2010 and 2005 were the warmest years on record.
Satellite and other monitoring, meanwhile, found nights were warming faster than days, and winters more than summers, and the upper atmosphere was cooling while the lower atmosphere warmed – all clear signals greenhouse warming was at work, not some other factor.
The impact has been widespread.
An authoritative study this August reported that hundreds of species are retreating toward the poles, egrets showing up in southern England, American robins in Eskimo villages. Some, such as polar bears, have nowhere to go. Eventual large-scale extinctions are feared.
The heat is cutting into wheat yields, nurturing beetles that are destroying northern forests, attracting malarial mosquitoes to higher altitudes.
From the Rockies to the Himalayas, glaciers are shrinking, sending ever more water into the world’s seas. Because of accelerated melt in Greenland and elsewhere, the eight-nation Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Program projects ocean levels will rise 90 to 160 centimeters (35 to 63 inches) by 2100, threatening coastlines everywhere.
“We are scared, really and truly,” diplomat Laurence Edwards, from the Pacific’s Marshall Islands, told the AP before the 1997 Kyoto meeting.
Today in his low-lying home islands, rising seas have washed away shoreline graveyards, saltwater has invaded wells, and islanders desperately seek aid to build a seawall to shield their capital.
The oceans are turning more acidic, too, from absorbing excess carbon dioxide. Acidifying seas will harm plankton, shellfish and other marine life up the food chain. Biologists fear the world’s coral reefs, home to much ocean life and already damaged from warmer waters, will largely disappear in this century.
The greatest fears may focus on “feedbacks” in the Arctic, warming twice as fast as the rest of the world.
The Arctic Ocean’s summer ice cap has shrunk by half and is expected to essentially vanish by 2030 or 2040, the U.S. National Snow and Ice Data Center reported Sept. 15. Ashore, meanwhile, the Arctic tundra’s permafrost is thawing and releasing methane, a powerful greenhouse gas.
These changes will feed on themselves: Released methane leads to warmer skies, which will release more methane. Ice-free Arctic waters absorb more of the sun’s heat than do reflective ice and snow, and so melt will beget melt. The frozen Arctic is a controller of Northern Hemisphere climate; an unfrozen one could upend age-old weather patterns across continents.
In the face of years of scientific findings and growing impacts, the doubters persist. They ignore long-term trends and seize on insignificant year-to-year blips in data to claim all is well. They focus on minor mistakes in thousands of pages of peer-reviewed studies to claim all is wrong. And they carom from one explanation to another for today’s warming Earth: jet contrails, sunspots, cosmic rays, natural cycles.
“Ninety-eight percent of the world’s climate scientists say it’s for real, and yet you still have deniers,” observed former U.S. Rep. Sherwood Boehlert, a New York Republican who chaired the House’s science committee.
Christiana Figueres, Costa Rican head of the U.N.’s post-Kyoto climate negotiations, finds it “very, very perplexing, this apparent allergy that there is in the United States. Why?”
The Australian scholar Hamilton sought to explain why in his 2010 book, “Requiem for a Species: Why We Resist the Truth About Climate Change.”
In an interview, he said he found a “transformation” from the 1990s and its industry-financed campaign, to an America where climate denial “has now become a marker of cultural identity in the `angry’ parts of the United States.”
“Climate denial has been incorporated in the broader movement of right-wing populism,” he said, a movement that has “a visceral loathing of environmentalism.”
An in-depth study of a decade of Gallup polling finds statistical backing for that analysis.
On the question of whether they believed the effects of global warming were already happening, the percentage of self-identified Republicans or conservatives answering “yes” plummeted from almost 50 percent in 2007-2008 to 30 percent or less in 2010, while liberals and Democrats remained at 70 percent or more, according to the study in this spring’s Sociological Quarterly.
A Pew Research Center poll last October found a similar left-right gap.
The drop-off coincided with the election of Democrat Barack Obama as president and the Democratic effort in Congress, ultimately futile, to impose government caps on industrial greenhouse emissions.
Boehlert, the veteran Republican congressman, noted that “high-profile people with an `R’ after their name, like Sarah Palin and Michelle Bachmann, are saying it’s all fiction. Pooh-poohing the science of climate change feeds into their basic narrative that all government is bad.”
The quarterly study’s authors, Aaron M. McCright of Michigan State University and Riley E. Dunlap of Oklahoma State, suggested climate had joined abortion and other explosive, intractable issues as a mainstay of America’s hardening left-right gap.
“The culture wars have thus taken on a new dimension,” they wrote.
Al Gore, for one, remains upbeat. The former vice president and Nobel Prize-winning climate campaigner says “ferocity” in defense of false beliefs often increases “as the evidence proving them false builds.”
In an AP interview, he pointed to tipping points in recent history – the collapse of the Berlin Wall, the dismantling of U.S. racial segregation – when the potential for change built slowly in the background, until a critical mass was reached.
“This is building toward a point where the falsehoods of climate denial will be unacceptable as a basis for policy much longer,” Gore said. “As Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said, `How long? Not long.’”
Even Wally Broecker’s jest – that deniers could blame God – may not be an option for long.
Last May the Vatican’s Pontifical Academy of Sciences, arm of an institution that once persecuted Galileo for his scientific findings, pronounced on manmade global warming: It’s happening.
Said the pope’s scientific advisers, “We must protect the habitat that sustains us.”